Paysage avec Orphée et Eurydice

Nicolas Poussin · PD

Paysage avec Orphée et Eurydice


Détails

Année
1650
Technique
huile sur toile
Type
peinture
Dimensions
124 × 200 cm

L'histoire

Poussin painted this in Rome around 1650, working the way he liked, building a calm, ordered landscape and then hiding a catastrophe inside it. In the foreground the poet Orpheus sits playing his lyre to Eurydice, unaware that at this instant, off to the side, a snake in the grass is about to bite her and carry her down to the underworld. Look past them to the castle on the water, where a plume of dark smoke rises from a tower. Poussin scholars read that distant fire as an echo of the disaster about to strike the couple, a warning folded quietly into the scenery. The tower itself is based on the Castel Sant'Angelo, the fortress Poussin could see across the Tiber from his own Rome.

Paysage avec Orphée et Eurydice — Nicolas Poussin — MuseScope